Apple refers to its Beats 1 radio station as "an eclectic mix of the latest and best in music," but does its playlist match that slogan?

Apple Music's Beats 1 radio station launched to great fanfare on June 30, led by a two-hour program with the very excitable BBC Radio expat Zane Lowe. In the week that followed, the station premiered curated programs from artists including Q-Tip, St. Vincent, Dr. Dre and Pharrell, as well as more traditional -- or at least relatively predictable -- radio programming from its Los Angeles (where Lowe is based), New York (led by Ebro Darden), and London (led by Julie Adenuga) hubs.

There are no replays made available for Beats 1 programming, though several of its curated programs, like St. Vincent's mixtape-themed show, have been made available as playlists through Apple Music's Connect feature. To make up for this purposeful omission (Apple told Billboard during a preview of the app that they “wanted people to miss things”), web developer Callum Jones created the @Beats1Plays Twitter account, which automatically sends a tweet whenever Beats 1 plays a new song. By scraping this data, Billboard obtained a more complete picture of the Beats 1 playlist in its first week on the air.

Predictably, Pharrell's exclusive track "Freedom" led the first week of Beats 1 airplay, with 29 total “reloads.” The track was premiered as the station's first World Record, a program similar to BBC Radio 1's “Hottest Record In The World” that scheduled the track for airplay during each DJ's debut program. Just behind Mr. Williams with 27 plays was The Weeknd's "Can't Feel My Face," another song with close ties to Apple, having officially premiered during its Worldwide Developers Conference on June 8. Compared to the 363 plays that Omi's "Cheerleader" (Felix Jaehn Remix) garnered on one U.K. station last week, Beats 1 has a long way to go before it begins to replicate the "same song on repeat" feeling of much of mainstream radio.

So far, Beats 1's playlist has skewed heavily toward new music and recent hits: 83 percent of its 54 most-played songs were released in 2015, with the rest in 2013 and 2014. The resulting tracklisting departs significantly from a typical mainstream top 40 playlist, however; only seven of the current top 25 songs on Billboard's Radio Songs chart appear, bearing more of a resemblance to the BBC's Radio 1 rotation. Unsurprising given the three headquarters, American and English groups led Beats 1's heaviest rotation as well, with 44 percent and 39 percent representation, respectively. Alternative and indie rock made up almost 30 percent of its genre distribution, followed by 22 percent airplay for hip-hop and rap artists.

Below, Billboard has listed the playlist from all of the first week's specialty shows, as well as the week's most-played songs.